In total, more than 40 women have come forward to accuse Cosby of
sexual assault.

Add another story to the list.

On Sunday night, New York magazine
released a stunning cover story, collecting the accounts
of 35 of Cosby's accusers to paint a picture of Cosby as an
unrepentant, manipulative sexual predator. The cover image is
particularly striking. It features all 35 women seated next to
one another, with an empty chair for women who have yet to come
forward.

The story itself features a combination of video, photos,
individual testimonies, and a narrative tying it together. The
accounts are harrowing in their detail and similarity. Each woman
was interviewed separately.

One account, from Patricia Leary Steuer, a former training and
development specialist who encountered Cosby in the late 1970s,
is emblematic of the accounts:

Then-22-year-old Steuer worked at the University of Massachusetts
and met Cosby there after he gave a lecture in 1978. He offered
to mentor Steuer as she pursued a singing career. Cosby later
invited her to a dinner party at his Massachusetts home. When
Steuer got there, the table was set for just two people. Cosby
handed Steuer a drink and insisted she perform an improv
exercise, pretending she was a queen with oatmeal covering her
face. She began to feel woozy. Her next memory is of Cosby
standing above her — her clothes off — in a bathrobe. He handed
her a toothbrush, telling her she had gotten sick and passed out
in his guestroom. Steuer went home, still unsure of what actually
happened to her. Cosby kept in touch, arranging for acting
lessons and a gym membership for her. He invited Steuer to
events, but nothing more occurred until he asked her to join him
in Atlantic City. In the evening, she met him in his suite, where
he handed her two large pills and a glass of Champagne. The next
morning, she woke up naked in one of the rooms of his suite.
Steuer joined on as a Jane Doe in the 2005 Andrea Constand
lawsuit; she had initially wanted a pseudonym in New York, but
when the news broke that Cosby admitted in depositions that he'd
given women quaaludes, she sent an email saying that protection
wasn’t necessary. "He can no longer claim that we are lying," she
wrote.